Microsystems Development Technologies, Inc. v. Panasonic Corporation et al
Filing
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ORDER DENYING DIRECT PURCHASER PLAINTIFFS' 546 MOTION FOR FINAL APPROVAL AND 543 MOTION FOR ATTORNEYS' FEES, EXPENSES AND SERVICE AWARD. Signed by Judge James Donato on 9/6/2019. (jdlc2S, COURT STAFF) (Filed on 9/6/2019)
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
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NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
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IN RE RESISTORS ANTITRUST
LITIGATION
ORDER DENYING DIRECT
PURCHASER PLAINTIFFS’ MOTION
FOR FINAL APPROVAL AND
MOTION FOR ATTORNEYS’ FEES,
EXPENSES AND SERVICE AWARD
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Re: Dkt. Nos. 546, 543
United States District Court
Northern District of California
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Case No. 15-cv-03820-JD
In this antitrust class action, the direct purchaser plaintiffs have reached class action
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settlements with all remaining defendants. The Court previously granted preliminary approval of
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those settlements. Dkt. Nos. 541, 542. DPPs now seek final approval, as well as attorney’s fees,
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expenses and a service award. Dkt. Nos. 546, 543. The motions are deficient in several ways, and
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are denied.
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Final Approval: The DPPs’ motion was filed on July 29, 2019, but the claims period did
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not close until August 14, 2019. There have been no updates apprising the Court of any additional
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claim forms received between July 29, 2019, and August 14, 2019, or the status of the claim forms
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received from the “205 entities not on the class list [that] were filed on the settlement website.”
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Dkt. No. 546 at 6. See N.D. Cal. Procedural Guidance for Class Action Settlements (“Procedural
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Guidance”), Final Approval ¶ 1 (“The motion for final approval briefing should include . . . the
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number of class members who submitted valid claims”). The Court would also like to understand
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the estimated range for the pro rata distributions to class members, and the details of proposed
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payment, e.g., how long class members will have to cash their checks and what will happen to any
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uncashed amounts.
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Attorney’s Fees, Expenses and Service Award: DPPs request an attorney’s fees award of
$10.05 million based on summary charts listing attorneys’ and staff members’ names, their hourly
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rates and total number of hours billed. Dkt. No. 543-1, Exs. B & C; Dkt. No. 543-2, Exs. 1 & 2.
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In effect, the charts just give a name and an associated total billing amount -- often well into the
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several hundreds of thousands of dollars -- with no breakdown whatsoever explaining how the
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time was used to benefit the class. This approach is plainly insufficient under well-established
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standards. No paying client would ever stand for it, and it is a disservice to the class and the
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Court. The charts also do not provide the level of detail that is required by our district’s
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Procedural Guidance. See Procedural Guidance, Final Approval ¶ 2 (“Declarations of class
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counsel as to the number of hours spent on various categories of activities related to the action by
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each biller, together with hourly billing rate information may be sufficient, provided that the
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declarations are adequately detailed.”).
United States District Court
Northern District of California
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The $25,000 bonus requested for named plaintiff Schuten Electronics is equally bereft of
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support. Schuten Electronics’ president James Schuten simply “estimates” the hours of work he
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did with no time records or periods of any sort and only the vaguest of descriptions of what his
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work was. Dkt. No. 543-3. See Procedural Guidance, Final Approval ¶ 3 (“All requests for
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incentive awards must be supported by evidence of the proposed awardees’ involvement in the
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case and other justifications for the awards.”). The Court also notes that the proposed award
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equates to an eye-watering hourly rate of $455 for Schuten, which vastly exceeds anything the
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Court has ever been asked to consider for a named plaintiff.
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There is no doubt that successful counsel are entitled to appropriate compensation for the
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work they do and the risks they take. The Court has no hesitation to award lodestars and
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multipliers when the circumstances warrant it, and has done so in many class action cases. But
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here, plaintiffs’ counsel at Cohen Milstein and Hagens Berman are in effect asking that they be
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paid whatever they think is fair, no questions asked. That will not do. The Court will not award
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millions of dollars based on counsel’s and the named plaintiff’s say-so, especially when that
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money will be taken directly out of the hands of class members.
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Proposed Order: The proposed order submitted by DPPs contains self-congratulatory
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language that is unwarranted and unhelpful to the Court. Representative samples include
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sentences such as, “class counsel has achieved exceptional results for the class,” “this case . . .
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require[ed] a high level of skill by class counsel,” and “the reputation and ability of Hagens
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Berman and Cohen Milstein supports the requested fee.” Dkt. No. 546-1. Statements like these
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are better suited for firm marketing materials than they are for orders proposed for the Court’s
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issuance.
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DPPs may file new motions by October 7, 2019. If that deadline is not met, the case will
be advanced to the Court’s trial calendar.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Dated: September 6, 2019
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JAMES DONATO
United States District Judge
United States District Court
Northern District of California
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